Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 December 1865 — Page 2
CRXWFORDSVILLE, IND *.*? i-i
v- Saturday December 9,1865.
a9,n
t0
PMbll»h^ rroi'y Saturtlny ITIorii inc. br
CH ARLE5 H. BO WE N. Vnn*|lM Street* 't'4 Slory, -Brick
th^Tew
Lrc'» New
TEBM&.pF SUBSCRIPTION:^,00 IXADYAXCE.
I A I O N
MBUEB THAN ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN '. 'rinrfoi-iKrillc! Advertisers, call up and o.r.imtno our List of ,y. £jb#trtBsqRiBER8!,_Qi
XouIsTllle, New Albany & Chicago Railroad,
i». Time Tabic which look effect June l9tb,lS05. OOI.VO SORTIT. Accnmtna'tAtKin Through Freight.' 'Express
t. ...10.50 a. tn 2.40 p. m, .vv 8,02 VH
GOING SOPTU.
preS.I, .'..... .v..Through Freijjh t--.....i... Accoiumodaliou--...
0.53 nina, 0.53 c.u p^gn.
Good connections made' with nil otVer romls. B. F. M.ISTIN, Superlntendant. Juno 24*h. lc!65.
§ht -(fttfntbttffr.
Ricliard O'Gorinan, Democrat, is elected Corporation Co.unsel in New York City by majority of 17,000.
Of the Common Council thirteen out of twentjr-four are Republicans. This is a beautiful result for,a city that has 50,000 Democratic majority. It'Tras all owing to local di•visiona.
General Banks lias niadc a .Louisiana delegation, in which he approves the President's Jlessngo and favors negro suffrage.
'. The Fenian Senate commenced an extra session in Sew York yesterdnj The bill allowing negroes to testify in Courts has been tabled in the TennesBeo Legislature. 5.'.
The President does not Intend to appoint a new Collector in Jsew York for some time. General Grant has arrived in Charleston.— He has declined a public dinner tendered him the merchants and citizona of the city. _...L Governor Orr, of South Carolina, was inaugurated on the 29th, at Columbia.
The Hibernian is in with later news from Europe.
Stephens, Lbs Fenian Head Center, cscapcd from prison on the morning of the 24th. The cattle disease is reported to be on the increase in England ti'i ij: jJ
T^c California Legislature is in session They have had severe and continuous gales bcJ*1 ^"siiugton Territory for the past three weeks, which have done much damage, causing a Buapcnaion of business. ,*•
The temperance prohibition bills have failed in the Indiana Legislature.
The Working-men's Convention in Indianapolis was largely attended.
The bill allowing negro testimony in the Courts has passed the Indiana Legislature.
Marshal Harris, of the Fire Department in Chicago, who was injured by the fall of a building, is slowly recovering.
1
Tho Senate committees were yesterday announced. They are about the same as last year. All the important positions are given
England Senators.
"Sr
V81
1
Mwi mWiWK "ISIPPP
fjj'x Vl'r 11,
§tP ISR
ti
*0' mJi
'Wl
Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, it is said, will be the Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means in the House. Raymond, of New York, Chairman of Foreign Affairs.
:They
have had a terrible gale on the coast
of Wales. Among the vessels lost was an English ship from Australia. There were five Lundred passengers on board, all of whom were saved.
4
i* tr,
Mrs. Wirz has made an affidavit denying the charge that she attempted to give her husband poison before his execution. It Was, as we suspected, entirely false.
.A terrible disease, among tho poultry has broken out in France.
The English Government has sent in a rettOMtruioe to Bfrfil' toi' IU, IIUMIH UWU Chili:.'
The nigger rebellion in Hayti has been put down by the nigger Government.
Lieutenant Maffit, formerly of the Alabama, xvas arrested in Portland yesterday. He had come there in the Hibernian, and was about taking the cars for Canada. !•,*
The State of Georgia, under compulsion, hab ratified the Abolition constitutional amendment. »$$ :*$ .''km*®
Bayles W. nanna. j«'
This gentleman, the Senator to the General Assembly of our State from Vigo county, has won, during the present session of our Legislature, the highest encomiums.
Mr. HASNA in the past five years has had a perfect storm of misrepresentations and abuse rained upon his head, and, undeservedly. A paUve of our county and ofty, we can not but /#el.a deep interest in the career of Mr HAN»A,*nd have no fear but that he will, in every emergency justify our expectations. We fiumber J»ia friends and personal admirers in pur county by the thousands, and we are pleased, to chronicle the. fact, that their esteem has never been lessened or their confidence shaken by the miserable lies and persecutions that f.a7 Jeen.!',eaped
UP°*
*lm- We feel certain
Uiat he will pursue, as heretofore, tho path of duty r^dless of the frown? pf power or the enmity of tjio wprthjess.
z/fx
tf.fi
THE rRESIBKJfY'S MES8A0E. Wc give this week, in a supplemenfary fcrrmj tho Message of his Excellency ANDREW JOHNSON. We catf n6t rfecall a time when a Message of the Executive was looked for with more anxiety. The dominant power the. President can exercise is greater nowthan at any period of our history, and the minds of the pcoplo have arrived at the settled conviction, tliat an obsequious Congress, and the myriads of office holders dependent upon his nod, will hasten to indorse his policy and bring their burnt offerings to his shrine, even though they do it grudgingly, and not as "cheerful givers."
Mr. JOUNSON, we ARE pleased to say, docs not think that the people were made for the-Government but that the Government was made for the people. This is a decided innovation on the ideas that have prevailed for the past five years, and seems to indicate that wo shall be able to unseat the favored few that have ridden us "booted and spurred" in the name of liberty, and who have been intolerant enough to attempt the high outrage of putting down all liberty except their liberty. The President's Message foreshadows the morn, when the sun, as It drives away the mist, will reveal something in the foreground to engage the attention of our rulers besides the "cullured cuss from Africa." Th% millennium of heads, with only sufficient capacity to contain one idea, and that a dark one, is past, and the era of the white man's redemption is come. The President, perhaps, remembering the time when lie toiled as a poor man, is in favor of^iaxiug the Government bonds, that now staud exempt^ and of a necessiij VUU.J.V.AO $.anie, not only to pay interest on them, but pay vw taxes of the holders of the same—a gross injustice, which, when the people fufly understand, they will hasten to rectify, if our Congress does not.
The President favors the re'admission of the Southern States—does not wish their representation reduced—and is in favor of leaving the question of uegro suffrage to the States respectively—in favor of Homestead law—of the reduction of the army to fifty thousand men—and ithe trial of rebel leaders by the civil xfourts.
The Presidebt throws the responsibility of enforcing the Monroe Doctrine on Congress, where it belongs, but shows by that the relations between our Goycrnmeut «tud that uf Great Brittain are of a very unsatisfactory nature, and that we are almost- at an open rupture. But England will find, that the Southern people whom she covertly encouraged and betrayed, and the Northern people, whom she bullied and disregarded when in the midst of a civil war, are a unit in their hatred of her, and would hail the opportunity of dealing out retributive justice, ggr
His Excellency does no£ forgetbthe Constitution of the United States, nor the people. He remembers that, under the rights secured by the former, he, unaided, and by dint of perseverence, has reached the topmost round of the ladder, and from its dizzy hight, he does not spurn the low degrees by which he climbed.
We urge our subscribers to read this Message—give it a careful perusal. Mr. Johnson has fearlessly, wKtie surrounded by unscrupulous and dangerous fanatioa, enunciated principles worthy of the masses from whom he sprung, iu spite of threats, in defiance of the muttcrings of the would be rulers of the Capitol. Let him be sustained.
A FAMILIAR FACE.—Our former townsman, SAM. C. CRA.VE is in town, "as good looking as ever''—but the less said about that, the better.
Runrcscntative Hall, at
Indianapolis, on Friday night last, to acrowued audience. Subject:—"Life in this Fast Age and Fast Country." The Indianapolis papers speak of it in the most flattering terms, and the Lecture is to be repeated there at an early day. There is some talk Ik having it here. Why not? Sam was,a good soldier, and let us give him a benefit.% "The Strange Adventure," of which Mr. Crane is the author, had the unpreccdent sale of four thousand copies, in ten weeks, in Indianapolis alone. A few copies may be found at tho Corner Book Store, at ten cen^s each A very "Strange Adventure."
The 5cw York City Election.^1 •The Republicans played a sharp game at th^ late city election in New York, but it^i^iq^win. 'JThey pretendedi befort the electionitliey were going for Heckej. the Citizens-reform candidate for Mifyot. .whose name floated at the liead-o.f- their lerfdittg journals. Just befofe'thV eled.tion' Marshall -Roberts waS'bjonght out as a Republican candidate-, atrd^npoii him tho Republican vote wa'S qnietly concentrated on election day. Tho Democrats finding Hecker abandoned,. and Gunither having no chance, changed to ^Hoffman-—a Tammmany Democrat—in such numbers that lie was elected by a small majority. Tho city of New Yprk, with its 50,000 Democratic majority, thus escaped the disgrace of a Republican Mayor, although three other ^Qtnocrats were in the field. Had the Republicans voted for Hcckcr he would have been' elected, as he had the support of!a-'form idablc section of the Democracy, %'k'r-
& M.
Sit
DR. KNAPP, formerly of New York, who will visit Crawtordsville regularly in mo luturo, is effecting many wonderful cures of old Chronic Diseases, Cancerfe, and diseases of the Lye and Ear, which have been pronounced incurable by tho medical profession generally, can be consulted at tho Cvane House, Wednesday Dec. 20tli, as will be seen by his card in another column. f* .Consultation Free.
A
"i
1
DESSAUER
••it
-Jd The Eclectic Magazine.
vj
This splendid periodical, for December, has come to baud. The number contains a magnifloent steel engraving of tho Kremlin at Mc^ffow, and & choiee selection of artioles from the most celebrated English maga»i»ce and reviews.
8
A MOST ferocious ""and horrible and wholesale murder was committed in Burlington, Racine County, Wisconsin, last Sunday forenoon, some time between the hours of nine in the morning and odif in the afternoon. The victims belong to a family named Cook, living about one mile from the village and three quarters of a mile from the Racine and Minsissippi Railroad depot. While Mr. and Mrs. Cook were at church, some wretch entered their house and murdered in cold blood, their children, all under fourteen years, the oldest a girl of thirteen named Amelia Wing, a niece a son, aged eight or nine, and a daughter, aged three, of Mr. and Mrs. Cook.
The murderer or murderers then broke oPfca t.W bureau drawers and ransacked the house creneran». 'wiwtjvcr in their search but three or four douLTwo arrests have been made—one a man who was living with the family, and whom circumstances seem to indicate as.tho murderer also, another man. companion of the first, and whose name we have not learned. The deed seems to have been committed with an ax, and was not discovered until the parents returned from church, and found the children weltering iu their blood. It would seem, at first thought, that money was the object of the murderers, were it not impossible to believe such damnable murders could be committed to obtain that which might' have been obtained without the enactment of this terrible tragedy. It is more consistent to suppose that the gratification of some fiendish malice against the parents provoked the murder.
,s"
Getting Ready for Christmas. We notice that PATTEnson's Bazaar is receiving daily, new and elegant goods for the holidays. Mr.
JAMES HEATO.V,
BUY
YOUR
the gentleman
ly salesman of the establishment, is assorting these arrivals, and in a few days he will be happy, to have all of his old friends, and particularly the ladies, call at the Bazaar and see the thousands of beautiful articles in the shape of jewelry, books and toys.
CLOTHING
AT THE
STORE.—L.
EAOLE CIJOTHINCI
are receiving daily
the latest nnd most fashionable s^yle of readymade clothing. They have a splendid variety of Overcoats which our farmers would do well to call and examine before purchasing elsewhere. *T §fp
TnE engineers engaged in locating the East and West Railroad, have run a line alongside the track of the Louisville & Chicago Railroad, commencing at the south end of the deep cut and crossing the ravine North of
J. A. BALDWIN, of Prairie Edge, Indiana, is at present engaged in furnishing fruit trees and ornamental shrubbery of all kinds. The trees arc grown at the Indianapolis Nursery. They need no recommendation.
IF you need a pair of boots^made of the best material, something that will keep your feet warm and dry, go to Hood's Boot and Shoe Emporium where you will see the largest and best assorted stock of boots und shoes in the city. V85P
^Codcy for January.
The January number of Godey's Book, vl,,cli haa been received, is one of tho finest specimens of typographic art and literarj merit wc have ever seen. In magazine literature, Godey is unrivalled. Every lady in Montgomery county should send for it. «M»—
WORK on. tho Crawfordsville & Darlington gravel turnpike, will be commonced on next Monday.
A WOMAN, named Mrs. Mary Walker, has been sent to the penitentiary from Jennings county,
Indiana, for
for horte stealing,
two years
"f'^honsand Millions of Bonds Should' Coirtffii#
to Think _on thfe Sutyect—It Mwt Be Kept before the.People. ^Read the'folloVui^ artielti
WATCHMAN, WHAT OF THE NIGHT Lots of Goverrhm'ent' bonds irf the poclcqts of t)ie rich, drawing interest, and exenvptfrbni: taxation. Mu l!±
Who pays the interest? —... The man^tt^at. labors,. and- earns his 1 bread by the sweetjof bis brow,,^
The fafme.r who^'tills the soil. ,, ,. The* mechanic whi works up a lieavilv Ka^ed material.* *. K4,I"' ^'Mr. Poormau^Miow^m^cli are'you taxed on your little 81,000 farm?" .. "Thirty dollars?" "Mr. llichmati, ho'w much do you pay on.ypur 810,000 bonds?" "Not- one cent, sir Mr. Jay Cooke tells me that a national debt is a national bussing, and I find it is, sir. Here are §10,000 in personal property that don't cost me a cent, and besides, sir, I ain drawing six per cent, in gold, equaling nearly nine hundred dollars in national eujroncy. Now, if I had that 810,000 in a Farm, I would have to pay thereon about' 830Q, but I draw an interest of 8900.-—add tJ?i8 8300 to 8900, and I have the advantage ovor the landholder of 81,200 in a single year 1" "Is that the way it works, Mr. Richman?" "Of course, sir! It is a national blessing to me, and no mistake. So it has been to. Mr. Jay Cooke, who made 81 500,000 in simply selling bonds!,' 'irBut, Mr. Richman, must not tftis national debt and the interest thereon be paid?" "Of course, sir, of course, sir, this national blessing debt must be paid, and no mistake." '•Then, sir, who is to pay this debt, and the immense interest that is every year accumulating—who is to pay you S900 a year? Do you not help to pay this debt and interest?" "Why, I have all my property in bonds —I am exempt from taxation—the assessors have no business with me. I am a five-twenty man, sir, ahem! sir."
fron\HlS\.^ofe^ and hundreds and thousands like you"are also exempted, who is to pay this immense debt and this interest, which you claim as a national blessing?" "Why, sir, it must be raised from the taxable property of the country and the men who own land, goods and chattels, mechanics and the laboring classes must foot the bill. But, what is that to me. sir? I enjoy the national blessing—I do! I have some coupons now due in 1113' pocket, which I must go to our-National Bank and draw the gold on!" "But, my friend, do you think that is honest and fair?" '•Yes, of course! every man has'the privilege—ahem!" "But will it last?" "Last! what are you talking about? Has some fool of a copperhead been sticking mischief in your head? Last! of course it will. It is foolish to talk about taxing the bouds. We have the political power now. We'll make the Demecrats and" all the poor white trash pay the taxes and the interest on our bonds. If there is any Republican so unfortunate as to own land, or to labor for his living, he must suffer the consequences. The bondhold ars must have their interest. It would be a breach of loyalty to make us assist in bearing the burdens of the war debt and the Government. Very unloyal! I must buy a few more bonds, so that I can live cutirely. on my annual income of interest, to be paid to me by my neighbors, farmers, mechanics and laborers, who are not enjoying the national blessing."
SHALL FOREIGN CAPITAL UK Ex I r- FROM TAXATION?
A decision lias been rendered in the United States Circuit Court, in session at Baltimore, Chief Justice Chase and Judge Giles 011 the bench, which is of the greatest possible interest to tax-payers in the United States. We publish elsewhere a statement of the case, and the main
th^epot, running thence a few rods beyond Waflbn & Vance's Pork House, where it djj| points in the decision of the courts, as reported in the Baltimore Commercial.
verges in a North West direction, crossing Sugar Creek a short distanco above Sperry's a
TlILRE is ifStbing (hat pleases a young Miss so well as a pair of nice fitting shoes. Cinderilla, the fair maid of the kitchen, rogelcd in nor ltiirjr mipptM B. They wore tj^ atimirtttion of everybody. Go to Hood's, ladies, if you want a shop that combines elegance with durability. ...
The internal Revenue act, section 122, subjects "all railroad, canal, turnpike, canal navagation or slickwater companies to
J!? far eDt-
0,1 a11
40
interests
and dividends derived from their bonds or shares, and authorial them to withhold that amount from bondholders and share holders, and make payment to Government a discharge to that extent from payment to them." Hitherto, this provision of the law lias been held to apply to citi zcus and aliens, residents and non-resi-dents, alike. A British subject, residing in Ireland, brought the suit in question, to compel the Northern Central Raihoad Company togpay over to him an amount withheld under the foregoing clause in the revenue law. TKe Court ruled that, taken independently, this section of the law would impose a tax upon foreign equally with American stockholders but that the various sections were to be construed collectively, and, as other sections were made to apply specially to citizens of and residents in the United States, the inference was that only these classes were contemplated by the framers of the statute We do not claim the possession of sufficient legal lore to review the running of the court but we are quite sure the American people will protest against exempting from taxation the immense foreign capital sent hither for investment. A common-sense view of the subject had led the masses to believe that the clause requiring corporations to withhold the taa from bondholders and pay it directly to the Government, was inserted solely With a 1 1 yiew
r®ach
foreign bond and,
fiharooolders. There would be no oecoa-
sity for silch provision were aH •the-par-ties amenable to taxationjresiclents'of the 'Uintedy States,.~/fq!i£ they. Jco^ld then lfe 'reached by the' ordinary mode of (collecting the 'revenue but by no means could foreigners with'American investments be reached. The court, however, ruled otherwise, ,and held that this section— seemingly of a special and exceptional character—alrould be interpreted in the ligptpf^the provisiopa ptl^rv sectiop,B.
There is-no Valid ^reason foreign capital invested iu American corporations should be exempted from taxation, any more than similar investments of American capital. Some of our railroads are .largely owned by foreign capitalists, as is the case with the Atlantic and Great Wcstern^the New York and.Erie andjthe Illinois Central. There'is ho reason why the. mcm,bers'of. such corporations,!receiving) as they do, the protection of the government, and reaping all the advantages of our laws, should enjoy an exemption from Federal taxation* whilst other corporations of a similar character, composed of Americans, are taxed to the full extent of the law. Some one has blundered. If the court is right, then is Con gn&s wrong. If the framers of the stat utes perpetrated such a stupid blunder, it is to hoped the law will be speedily amended. Should the verdict of the Circuit Court be affirmed by the Supreme
Court, then must the law be construed in the light of this decision, in which case the only remedy would be found iu ati amendment of the act. In no event can our government afford to discriminate in favor of foreign capitalists to the detriment of our own tax-payers, and we hope the matter will receive the early attentiou of Congress.
FK0M WASHINGTON, /r
Reception of (lie President's Message—Suuiner Sneers at it and Thad. Stevens Regards It a Second-rate Lecture—Mr. Johnson on the Rights of States—Other
Subjects Treated Upon—Congressional Proceedings Yesterday. (Special Dispatch to tho Cincinnati Enquirer.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.
The President's Message has been received with many expressions of gratifi cation by the Democratic and conservative Republican members of Congress. a _, .... vJ ac by Clias. Sumner, and in the House pronounced by Thad. Stevens as not equal in ability to a second-rate lecture. By the unprejudiced masses, it is regarded as a dignified, able, statesmanlike document, enunciating great principles, and, without desceuding to details, laying down the fundamental law in- reference to all the great political topics of the hour.
As was long ago predicted by this correspondent, Mr. Johnson declares unequivocally. that none of the States have ever been out of the Union, and that each State has a right to regulate for itself .the qualifications for suffrage that the independence of the States is as essential as iHo ooi-opniQiity nf »lin I?orlnf«l Gnroi-n ment, to the maintenance of a republican government, and that Congress has the right to judge of the election, returns and qualifications of members.
This language is considered as peculiarly significant, wheu contrasted with Thad. Stevens' caucus resolutions, which assume that Congress has the right to inquire into the existence of the States. The tenor of the message, that the restoration to a loyal status of the States heretofore decided to be iu insurrection, is the proper prerogative of tlie Executive, and that Congress has no right to look beyond.the election returns and qualifications of its own members.
Witli-regard to our British complica-tions,-the. language of the President is regarded at least strong, if not menacing but in reference to Mexican affairs it is constructed iuto "Let us-wait a while."— Upon the whole, the message is regarded generally as making open isauo with tlio radicals of the Sumner-Stevens stripe, and has given great encouragement to the genuiqc Johnson men.
At a meeting of* the Democratic Central Committee, this evening, the message was very strongly approved.
As was predicted last night, Thad. Steveus' caucus resolution was laid over the Senate to-day. It will not pass that, body very speedily,'not at all. without es sential modifications, even after the una niiriity with which the Republican majority in the House seemed to follow the Radical lead. .The proceedings to-day arc regarded as a conservative triumph, and Republican Senators have expressed the opinion,
orc
end
of the present session
9 x°?f?ress) there will be found remaining only two raaicani a__„ ner in the Senate and Thaddcus in the House.
Defeat of the Tenipcrancc Bill—The Dcmocracy Vindicated, by the -Republican Legislators and the Republican Court—Numbers of Republicans Join the Democracy.
The Republican legislators have defeated the temperance bill, and on the grounds upon which the Democracy have resisted such legislation, at all times. The Republicans but repeat the arguments in Beebe vs. The State, and in the Herald on this subject, with which we understand the Supreme Court theoretically concurs: A proud day this for the good old holiest Democratic party. Cowgill, we believe the member's name is, we understand, runs so far ahead of the Democracy on the subject, that he would not vote for a temperance law if whisky ran knee-deep in the highways of the State. We accord honesty to the members voting against the law. We believe they have honestly joined the Democratic party. We feel that this is a day of Pentecost. Let the Democracy give thanks to-day for great accessions.. We be.lieve those voting with us are sincerely converted to the whisky party on Principles, and ve are quite sure thaa^-are. in prArtW $lan-
d?rs upcgLlhg Demoor^c^. will now c&aBe and wtsmre •past by sesewg the- meff-^tio heaped tfiem* upon us jpo^u^bl^t'-o^feeC tn inclusion We wish to -inquire what'efiThted* Lozier has now to say? We ask ParsonGoodwin,.now, what he think.'vof us a prophet? We desire to say to.friend1.lazier'that he has our sympathy^' We iAmgle our tears df joy wltliTiis on4TSe bcca-, sionand \he pex^igj^^^agT^vGlery,
Hallelujah," we. w£sh to be there to hear. —Indianapolis
New Adverti86ifteht&
Tcaeliers!
"C?OR School.Distrfots Np. l, 3. .9, IS, 21- «3-24 as Indiana C"-?D nty* dec9welB6Stt 3tM Ci" TownSft,T[uilie.
SvTrRAiY mP fronitho subscriber living in CrawC* fordsville, on ."Sunday, NoVeniber lO,18M?a larea Low,, mostly.yvhUo on tho hind Quarters* red spots on neok nnd shoulder?, white face, whito oxtchdinf? np|r the nose, about six years old, no onr marltB or brands. Any person giving information as to hor whereabouts Will bo liberally rewarded by leaving-word at Jtfmea Graham a storo.
,jn—
(d0we3) jQS°icpANIEL.
Creek, wauld roapcoifully infonu"tho^ cfHzeB»of Montgomery oounlythat lio is no^profttestonAlly engaged in Attending to disoasos of Horses.. Ho bos bad a successful practice for twenty ycara. Charxe&lib-
1
d9del805w4t.
I'C liDY'S
Actual BuSifles^ Collfegs
La'Payitte, Indiana. •:. "j
Bntcc'n IInll, Corner Jlain aud fifth Streets, Oppwitc Lahr House*
Tho object of this Institution, is to qualify yOiinK men in a Thorough and Practical manner for tho Counting UoOm and KU^tficss'puBuUs in general.
"The
Course of Instructions
now introduced in.tbis College is destined Le supM--cede all otl»cr niode3 of teaching npw in uso, ailtis founded upon the motto: "Tvqfh Young Mm at School what they' itiflFbe required to perform when engaged in the active purlinn .k *v5si
THIS INSTITUTIOK
has arrancoments and facilities for giving young inon such un education. !. B'iU 'ti'-jWAfiJ
E S
For full course of Instructions in Book Keoo- f' inc and Penmanship in all their' Business Kelations, mcludnig Lectures s^o Partial Course in same.-........ ....: for Ladiep.
For further particulars address the}Prineipaififex 434, enciosetstomp. »s Kk diwetf.
DR. KNAPP & SON,-
Pny8icians & Surgeon^ FORMERLY OF NEW .YORK. are treating successfully
CHRONIC DISEASES,
.1 On aNew Sjnstem! hich embraces the bost aud most approved methods in this and other countries for the'. 1 cure of all Chronic Diseases.
Wl
-V-—,„.cr..nr '.'."'v.1
ml Nervous and Ncuralgic Diseases. All fornix "ofScroftilti, Fever Sores •and 01il Ulcers Dyspepsin, Disenscs ot the?Liverf OoAtrp^tiidJIl/all Sjliin tlnonaes, Pulmnniirtf Consumption hi its^slbrly staRcs. ParalyMis. Lpilcpjy, Snlf Rhlum-Headadhes. all Heart Diseases, Diseases of Chiidrtn and Ncniinnl U'cnUncaa, nnd Snuiil Which aro carrying thousands to their graves iinnually. 1 vr.
E E A N E A
Ihey treat puccessfiiily, on a ne\r method all diseases oi the Eye and Ear. They have had more extensive practice, and better success in the treatment of all .* niSEMSJES of WOJft Than any other Physicians in America. They have cured women who have been confined Co their bed for years. They never fail to cure
E A I S
In all singes no matter of howlongstanding They cure AS MA so it never returns. They hayo a Sure Cure for tli»' distressing disease.
Mlemmorrhoids or Piles? They cure all Diseases i.f'the a a
DIPTHERIA CURED!
They have discovered a
Sure and Speedy Cure,
I'or lUlh,Terrible Disease!
It is also a sure cure for Scnrlntina, or Scarlet Ferer. .winch is of the same class of disease. It never fails tc ?'iro Diptlierin or Scarlntina in from 12 to 48 hours. It civos relief immediately.
I'RIC-B PER BOTTLE, $5,00
CANQEE8!
They have had an extensive praetico and wonderful, success in the treatment of Cancers, which they CURE without eating them out or.using tho Knife. Let thoso who have T1IUOUS OR SWELLI^CS, or a red spot loose no timp.in^liaving it attended tb, as a timely treatment may save them from tho horrors, suffering and death of an open cancer. $?m
CATARRH CURED!
1 uey are treating aiarrn on anew system which is a
Sure Qnre for this Disease?
Experieneo has proved that Catarrh aMtabtibo cured by LOCAL Ireatmcnt alone *hence, the^tftnnv advertised cures for Catarrh, all of which aro local rcmedies, gi vo relicf ONLY wbile tho patient is Usin* lliem. but never euro. iiderstixnilinfi the disease and we know it CANNOT be curcil by Local treatment ALONE, therefore, wo also prosonbo a CONSTITUTIONAL retnedy tobo taken nnu by tho combined i.pcAr. and CONSTITUTIONAL treatment,-ire aro enabled to.rom'ovo tbo CAUSES of CATAHKH. and thorebv effect
A PERMANENT CURE. THEIII
CONSULTATIOVS for years have averagod
from five to...seven tliousund a year, which gives «Lt
1 1
1 hem 11 n.oxptiriciie6. un?urposecd by any. Slid equaled only by afcv, lEPRpmenibor they do not promise to ouro all stnses of Disease. While all diseases afe curable, if taken in season, all stages are not. Your ease may be curable this week, not next—to-dty, not' to-mor-row: hence the danger of dolay. No Case will be received, wh,en there are any" doubts of ^Cure o^Tlelief.
Out terms aroOASii henco the lnone^mustbcient with airorderSTor medleinbs.' ltf costs from five' to fil'taen dollars per month, to doctor with us. whioh includes medicines.
ID*Tho poor will bo favored. CONSULTATION: FREE.
ItT Any ol the abovo diseases oan bo-treated «i»occssfully by the Patients' deseribing their -case in a letter, when they oannot see us,
Jr. K.n«ppi wlip-wiilvisitCrawfordsviUe regularly in thsfuture can booinsultedai thoCanb'Houso. \yeduuouay Ueoumber SUtK: .Wednesday, February 14th:.Wednesday, April lltn: Wednesday, June8th Wednesday^ August 1st -Wearieidayi 3ostcmb«r
